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Proceeding Paper

Finite Difference Simulation on Biomagnetic Fluid Flow and Heat Transfer with Gold Nanoparticles towards a Shrinking Sheet in the Presence of a Magnetic Dipole †

by
Ghulam Murtaza
1,
Lata Bonik
1,
Efstratios Em. Tzirtzilakis
2 and
Mohammad Ferdows
3,*
1
Department of Mathematics, Comilla University, Comilla 3506, Bangladesh
2
Fluid Mechanics and Turbomachinery Laboratory, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of the Peloponnese, 26334 Patras, Greece
3
Research Group of Fluid Flow Modeling and Simulation, Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Dhaka, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Presented at the 1st International Online Conference on Mathematics and Applications, 1–15 May 2023; Available online: https://iocma2023.sciforum.net/.
Comput. Sci. Math. Forum 2023, 7(1), 18; https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/IOCMA2023-14398
Published: 28 April 2023

Abstract

:
In this paper, we study the laminar, incompressible, and steady flow of a biomagnetic fluid, such as blood, containing gold nanoparticles through a shrinking sheet in the presence of a magnetic dipole. This model is consistent with both the principles of magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) and ferro-hydrodynamics (FHD). An effective numerical method that is based on an iterative process, tridiagonal matrix manipulation, and a common finite difference method with central differencing is used to generate the numerical solution of obtained ordinary differential equations (ODEs). The major numerical results show that the fluid velocity decreases as the ferromagnetic number increases whereas the skin friction coefficient shows the opposite behavior. As the ferromagnetic number increases, the rate of heat transfer with ferromagnetic interaction parameter is likewise observed and shown to be decreasing.

1. Introduction

The study of biomagnetic fluid has grown rapidly because it aims to uncover and develop remedies for several human body-related illnesses and disorders, such as producing artificial organs, making nanorobots for surgery, and creating cutting-edge imaging and signal processing methods for cancer, tumors, and other terminal illnesses. The field of medical imaging-based diagnostics (MRI, CT scan, ultrasound, etc.), targeted drug delivery, or hyperthermia therapies are only a few examples of how these study areas can directly affect the actual world [1,2,3]. Based on the principles of Ferrohydrodynamics, Haik et al. [4] first proposed a biomagnetic fluid dynamics (BFD) model, the biomagnetic fluid is a Newtonian, electrically non-conducting magnetic fluid, according to this model. They stated that under the effect of high gradient magnetic fields, the fluid magnetization significantly affects the flow. This BFD model was further extended by Tzirtzilakis et al. [5] by combining both principles of FHD and MHD. Murtaza et al. [6] investigated both electrical conductivity and magnetization affected the BFD flow over a stretching sheet. In order to increase the qualities of nanoparticles, Choi et al. [7] invented a new fluid in 1995 called nanofluid that mixes them with a base fluid such as blood, water, or oil. A nanofluid is a base fluid that has nanoparticles spread throughout it. The significance of magnetic dipole on heat characteristics of blood flow with CoFe2O4 particles towards an extended cylinder was investigated by Ferdows et al. [8] using MHD and FHD principles.
To the best of the authors’ knowledge, none of the aforementioned research has yet examined the effect of a strong magnetic field on blood flow with gold nanoparticles toward a shrinking sheet. The governing boundary layer equations were resolved using a well-known finite difference technique.

2. Mathematical Flow Equations with Flow Geometry

The two-dimensional boundary layer flow, heat, and mass transfer of a steady, viscous, laminar, incompressible, and electrically conductive bio-magnetic fluid flow (namely, blood) that contains gold nanoparticles in the presence of a magnetic dipole towards a shrinking sheet is considered here. This shrinking sheet is kept at a constant temperature T w and concentration C w , at y = 0 , where the X -axis is taken in the direction of the flow and the Y -axis is normal to it. It is assumed that the free stream velocity is U ( x ) = b x and the plate is shrunk with the velocity u w ( x ) = c x , where b and c are positive constants. It is also assumed that the constant mass flux velocity is v 0 with v 0 < 0 for suction and v 0 > 0 for injection. The ambient temperature is denoted by T and the concentration of nanoparticles by C , respectively. In addition, a constant B = B 0   transverse magnetic field is applied to the flow, with the assumption that it is applied in the positive y-direction. As seen in Figure 1, the magnetic dipole is situated far below the sheet, creating a magnetic field strong enough to saturate the biomagnetic fluid.
Under these considerations, we extend the work of [9,10], and the governing boundary equations are:
u x + v d y = 0
u u x + v u y = U d U d x + υ n f 2 u y 2 + σ n f B 0 2   ρ n f ( U u ) + μ 0 ρ n f   M 1   H x
u T x + v T y + μ 0 ( ρ c p ) n f   T   M 1 T ( u H x + v H y ) = k n f ( ρ c p ) n f 2 T y 2 + σ n f [ D B C y T y + D T T ( T y ) 2 ]
u C x + v C y = D B 2 C y 2 + D T T 2 T y 2
The equations are subjected to the boundary conditions [9]:
u = v = 0 ,   T = T ,   C = C   For   any   x , y v = v 0 ,   u = λ u w ( x ) ,   T = T w ,   C = C w   a t   y = 0 u U ( x ) ,   T T , C C   a s   y
where u and v are the velocity components along the x and y direction, respectively. The meaning of the symbols is found in [2,5,6,9]. The magnetic field of intensity is given by [5,6]: H ( x , y ) = γ 2 π [ 1 ( y + d ) 2 x 2 ( y + d ) 4 ] . Fluid magnetization with temperature is given by: M 1 = k H ( T T ) , where k is a pyromagnetic coefficient constant. Thermophysical corelation of nanofluid is given by [2]:
μ n f = μ f ( 1 φ ) 2.5 ,   ( ρ c p ) n f = ( 1 φ ) ( ρ c p ) f + φ ( ρ c p ) s ,
ρ n f = ( 1 φ ) ρ f + φ ρ s , υ n f = μ n f ρ n f = μ f ( 1 φ ) 2.5 [ ( 1 φ ) ρ f + φ ρ s ] ,
σ n f = ( 1 φ ) σ f + φ σ s ,   k n f k f = [ ( k s + 2 k f ) 2 φ ( k f k s ) ( k s + 2 k f ) + φ ( k f k s ) ]
The following transformations are introduced [9]:
η = c υ f y ,   ψ = c υ f x f ( η ) ,   θ ( η ) = ( T T ) ( T w T ) ,   ϕ ( η ) = ( C C ) ( C w C )
Therefore, the reduced form of the above equations are:
f + f f ( 1 φ ) 2.5 [ ( 1 φ ) + φ ρ s ρ f ] f 2   ( 1 φ ) 2.5 [ ( 1 φ ) + φ ρ s ρ f ] + M A ( 1 φ ) 2.5 [ ( 1 φ ) + φ σ s σ f ] M f ( 1 φ ) 2.5 [ ( 1 φ ) + φ σ s σ f ] + A 2 ( 1 φ ) 2.5 [ ( 1 φ ) + φ ρ s ρ f ] 2 β θ α 2 ( 1 φ ) 2.5 ( η + α ) 6 = 0
θ + f   θ P r   [ ( k s + 2 k f ) + φ ( k f k s ) ( k s + 2 k f ) 2 φ ( k f k s ) ]   ( ( 1 φ ) + φ ( ρ c p ) s ( ρ c p ) f ) + ( ( 1 φ ) + φ σ s σ f   ) P r   [ ( k s + 2 k f ) + φ ( k f k s ) ( k s + 2 k f ) 2 φ ( k f k s ) ] ( ( 1 φ ) + φ ( ρ c p ) s ( ρ c p ) f ) [ N b ϕ θ + N t θ 2 ] 2 β λ a   k f   f   α 2 ( ε θ ) k n f     ( η + α ) 5 = 0
ϕ + L e   f ϕ +   N t   N b   θ = 0
The transformed boundary conditions are:
At   η 0   :   f = S , f = λ ,   θ = 1 ,   ϕ = 1
At   η   :   f A ,   θ 0 ,   ϕ 0
Here, P r = υ f α f   , M = σ f B 0 2 ρ f c   , A = b c   ,   ε = T T T w   ,   β = γ 2 π μ 0 K H ( 0 , 0 ) ( T T w ) ρ f μ f 2   ,   λ a = c μ f 2 ρ f k f ( T T w ) ,   α = c υ f d ,   S = v 0 c υ f ,   N t = σ f D T ( T w T ) υ f T , N b = σ f D B ( C w C ) υ f ,   L e = υ f D B .

3. Results and Discussion

An effective numerical finite difference technique is used to solve ODEs numerically as proposed by [2,6]. According to the authors’ knowledge, this technique is based on (1) the common finite difference method with central differencing, (2) a tridiagonal matrix manipulation, and (3) an iterative procedure. A comparison between the present study and earlier studies was also calculated to show the accuracy of the applied code, and it is presented in Table 1. This encourages us to continue the work. Table 2 shows the thermo-physical values of blood and gold.
In Figure 2, the effect of ferromagnetic interaction parameters on velocity, temperature, and concentration profiles is depicted. In Figure 2, φ = 0 indicates pure blood and φ = 0.1 indicates Au (gold)-pure blood. In Figure 2a, it is observed that the increasing values of ferromagnetic interaction parameter magnetic fluid velocity decreases. This happens due to the correlation between the ferromagnetic number and the Kelvin force. Figure 2b. signifies the impact of the ferromagnetic interaction parameter on the temperature profile. It is observed that the temperature profile is decreased with increasing values of β . This is due to the fact that the applied magnetic field caused by the magnetic dipole generates the Kelvin, also known as the resistive force. The interaction of blood velocity and the applied magnetic field is responsible for this. In Figure 2c, the influence of ferromagnetic interaction parameter on the concentration profile graph is as the values of ferromagnetic interaction parameter increase, and the concentration boundary layer thickness is increasing in both cases for pure blood and gold pure blood.
Finally, Figure 2d–f depict the variation of skin friction coefficient f   ( 0 ) , local Nusselt Number θ   ( 0 ) , and local Sherwood Number φ ( 0 ) for different values of ferromagnetic parameter β against magnetic parameter M . From the figures, it is seen that f   ( 0 ) and φ ( 0 ) are both increases with the increasing values of β   , whereas the reverse trend is observed in θ   ( 0 ) .

4. Conclusions

Based on numerical results, our findings can be summarized as follows:
(i)
For enlarging values of ferromagnetic number, fluid velocity and temperature decreases, but the reverse phenomena is observed in the concentration profile.
(ii)
A significant improvement is observed for blood temperature and velocity profile when gold nanoparticles are mixed with blood compared to that of conventional regular fluid.
(iii)
Local Sherwood Number as well as skin friction coefficient are enhanced with augmenting values of ferromagnetic number, while major reduction is observed for the rate of heat transfer.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, L.B. and M.F.; Data curation, G.M. and L.B.; Formal analysis, L.B. and G.M.; Investigation, G.M., M.F. and E.E.T.; Methodology, E.E.T. and M.F.; Project administration, M.F.; Resources, M.F., L.B. and G.M.; Software, E.E.T.; Supervision, M.F. and E.E.T.; Validation, G.M. and L.B.; Writing original draft, L.B. and G.M.; Writing reviewing and editing, M.F. and E.E.T. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funding by Comilla University, Bangladesh. Grant No. 485/2013/1312(03).

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not Applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not Applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

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Figure 1. Schematic diagram of flow problem.
Figure 1. Schematic diagram of flow problem.
Csmf 07 00018 g001
Figure 2. Variations of ferromagnetic interaction parameter on (a) velocity; (b) temperature profiles. (c) concentration profile; (d) skin friction coefficient; (e) rate of heat transfer; (f) local Sherwood Number.
Figure 2. Variations of ferromagnetic interaction parameter on (a) velocity; (b) temperature profiles. (c) concentration profile; (d) skin friction coefficient; (e) rate of heat transfer; (f) local Sherwood Number.
Csmf 07 00018 g002
Table 1. Comparison values of f ( 0 ) for different values of A when   β = 0 ,   M = 0 ,   φ = 0 ,   S = 0 ,   λ = 1 ,   P r = 1 .
Table 1. Comparison values of f ( 0 ) for different values of A when   β = 0 ,   M = 0 ,   φ = 0 ,   S = 0 ,   λ = 1 ,   P r = 1 .
A Present Results Ibrahim et al. [10]Mahapatra et al. [11]Hayat et al. [12]
0.1 0.969405 0.9694 0.9694 0.96954
0.2 0.918135 0.9181 0.9181 0.91813
0.5 0.667262 0.6673 0.6673 0.66735
Table 2. Thermophysical values of blood and gold nanoparticles [8,13].
Table 2. Thermophysical values of blood and gold nanoparticles [8,13].
Thermophysical PropertiesBloodGold
C p   ( j / kgk ) 3.9 × 10 3 129
ρ   ( kg / m 3 ) 1050 19 , 300
σ   ( S / m ) 0.8 4.1 × 10 7
k   ( W / mK ) 0.5 318
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MDPI and ACS Style

Murtaza, G.; Bonik, L.; Tzirtzilakis, E.E.; Ferdows, M. Finite Difference Simulation on Biomagnetic Fluid Flow and Heat Transfer with Gold Nanoparticles towards a Shrinking Sheet in the Presence of a Magnetic Dipole. Comput. Sci. Math. Forum 2023, 7, 18. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/IOCMA2023-14398

AMA Style

Murtaza G, Bonik L, Tzirtzilakis EE, Ferdows M. Finite Difference Simulation on Biomagnetic Fluid Flow and Heat Transfer with Gold Nanoparticles towards a Shrinking Sheet in the Presence of a Magnetic Dipole. Computer Sciences & Mathematics Forum. 2023; 7(1):18. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/IOCMA2023-14398

Chicago/Turabian Style

Murtaza, Ghulam, Lata Bonik, Efstratios Em. Tzirtzilakis, and Mohammad Ferdows. 2023. "Finite Difference Simulation on Biomagnetic Fluid Flow and Heat Transfer with Gold Nanoparticles towards a Shrinking Sheet in the Presence of a Magnetic Dipole" Computer Sciences & Mathematics Forum 7, no. 1: 18. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/IOCMA2023-14398

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